167 A. 321 | Pa. | 1933
Argued March 30, 1933. This case originated in the filing of a mechanic's lien, Judgment was entered for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense, from which this appeal was taken. Under the terms of a bailment lease agreement, plaintiff installed an automatic sprinkler system in a large public garage owned by the defendant. The installation was part of the original construction of the building. The lease provided for a rental of $10,125, to be paid in five annual installments of $2,025 each, and when all the installments were paid, defendant was to have the option of purchasing the system by the payment of the further sum of $1. It was stipulated in the lease that the system should not become a fixture or part of the real estate, but should remain the personal property of the lessor until after the termination of the lease and acceptance by the lessee of the option to purchase. The first payment was in default at the time plaintiff filed the lien for the aggregate amount of the rental, with interest.
It is objected that the lien will not lie, first, because the sprinkler system is not a proper subject of a mechanic's lien, second, because title to it did not pass to defendant, and, third, because the right to file a lien was waived.
As regards the first objection, we are clear that this sprinkler system is a proper subject of mechanic's lien. *436
The system was a part of the original erection and construction of the building, and the specifications attached to the agreement make it plainly apparent that it became a part of it. Some portions were buried in the ground and in the partitions and walls of the building, and other parts were firmly clamped to the structure in numerous places. The system was provided for three floors of the building, and 810 sprinklers in all were installed. The equipment was of a permanent character, and from its nature, use and affixation became a part of the freehold. We held in General Fire Extinguisher Co. v. Magee Carpet Works,
As regards the second objection, that title to the system did not pass, we are unable to agree with defendant's contention. He argues that as the contract provides that title shall not pass until the equipment is fully paid for, and that the apparatus shall not become part of the realty, but shall remain personalty until paid for, with the right reserved to remove it in case of default, the system did retain its character as personalty, and plaintiff is therefore not entitled to a mechanic's lien. We cannot accept this argument. We should ignore stubborn physical facts and settled legal principles were we to regard this apparatus as not a part of the realty. Where words and acts conflict, the intention of the parties is best determined by their acts: Dorrance's Est.,
Chattels used in connection with real estate are of three classes: First, those which are manifestly furniture, as distinguished from improvements, and not peculiarly fitted to the property with which they are used; these always remain personalty: Vaughen v. Haldeman,
The sprinkler system in the instant case must, we think, be considered as falling within the second class above described — a part of the realty for all purposes. It was installed in the original construction of the building, it was a permanent improvement which would pass upon a sale of the freehold, it was affixed so that it could not be removed without material injury to the building and damage to itself. By these criteria, the apparatus became realty as an integral part of the building: Bank v. North, supra; Kinnear v. Scenic Rys. Co.,
Since, as we have seen, the apparatus did become a part of the realty, the provision in the contract that it should remain personal property was of no effect: Gough v. Wood, [1894] 1 Q. B. 713; Hobson v. Gorringe, [1897] 1 Ch. 182; Porter v. Pittsburg Steel Co.,
This conclusion, however, does not deprive the plaintiff of his right under the contract to remove the sprinkler system should defendant fail to pay for it. The true construction of this provision, for the retention of title with the right to remove in case of default, is that although the title does pass because of the manner in which the chattel was affixed, the plaintiff has a contractual right to remove the apparatus and thus reconvert it into personalty: In re Frederica Water Co., supra; Des Moines Improvement Co. v. Holland Furnace Co., supra; Trask v. Little, supra; Prescott v. Wells, supra. In Hobson v. Gorringe, supra, the English Court of Appeal said: "It seems to us that the true view of the hiring and purchase agreement, coupled with the annexation of the engine to the soil, . . . . . . is that the engine became a fixture — i. e., part of the soil — when it was annexed to the soil," subject to the right of the plaintiff "by contract to unfix it and take possession of it if King failed to pay him the stipulated monthly installments." In Reynolds v. Ashby Son, supra, another hire-purchase case, Lord LINDLEY said: "In effect, Holdway [the lessee] was authorized by the appellant to convert the chattels into fixtures, subject to the right of the appellant to enter and retake them if Holdway did not pay for them." In St. Paul Trust Co. v. U.S. Cereal Co., supra, where certain machinery had been sold upon conditional sale and affixed to the real estate, the Supreme Court of Minnesota said, "We nullify stubborn fact here if we consider the machinery anything but real *440
estate in fact. The plain actuality is, not that it remained personal property, but only that the vendor had the contract right by severance to retake it and so 'reconvert it into personalty.' . . . . . . The conditional sales contracts did not, as argued by appellants, preserve 'the status of the machinery as personal property until fully paid for.' In lieu of that artificial status there was outstanding only the right . . . . . . to retake the property as its own 'personal property.' " An example of the exercise of a contractual right of this nature is found in Coleman v. Lewis,
As regards the third objection, that the right to file a lien was waived, we are of opinion that the agreement of the parties has no such effect. On this point defendant's position is that the acceptance by plaintiff of defendant's notes for the purchase price, together with his retention of a right to remove the sprinkler system in the event of default in payment, operated as a waiver of any right to a mechanic's lien. While we recognize that the right to a mechanic's lien may be waived — it is expressly so provided in section 15 of the Mechanic's Lien Act of June 4, 1901, P. L. 431 — we cannot agree that plaintiff waived this right. There is not so much as a contention here that he expressly waived it. There has been no conduct that can be considered as equitably estopping him. The action is between the original parties to the contract. The plaintiff in good faith performed the work contracted to be done, while the defendant failed to make any payments, although receiving the full benefits of the installation under the contract. The right to a lien should be taken away in clear cases only. Mr. Justice SIMPSON expressed it best in Schwartz v. Whelan,
The notes given can be considered only as collateral security for payment. It cannot be successfully argued that a creditor is not entitled to as many securities for his debt as he can obtain. It has many times been held that the taking of notes or of a bond is not a waiver of the right to a mechanic's lien. In American Car Foundry Co. v. Alexandria Water Co.,
The provisions in the agreement for the retention of title and right to remove for default can no more be considered a waiver of the right to a lien than the acceptance of notes. These too must be regarded only as additional security for the payment of the debt and are not a waiver of the right to file a mechanic's lien: C. A. R. R. Co. v. Union Rolling Mills Co.,
Judgment affirmed.